
While Joachim Trier’s tragicomedy dazzles with technical mastery and standout performances from its close-knit cast, it ultimately falls short of capturing the emotional depth and resonance that defined his earlier works.

While Joachim Trier’s tragicomedy dazzles with technical mastery and standout performances from its close-knit cast, it ultimately falls short of capturing the emotional depth and resonance that defined his earlier works.

Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value, which won the Grand Prix at Cannes, is an elliptical and elusive family drama, which lingers long after it’s finished. Unlike The Worst Person in the World, his previous release, it’s not divided into chapters, but it has a similar sense of fragmentation, asking the audience to make sense of silences, truncated scenes and everything that remains unspoken in the relationship between parent and child. In particular, it asks us to greet acts of public parental grandiloquence when scepticism, especially when they occur later in life. At its core are three characters – Nora Borg, a successful stage actress living in Oslo, played by Renate Reinsve; Agnes, Nora’s sister, played by Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas; and their father, Gustav Borg, an acclaimed film director, played by Stellan Skarsgard. When Nora and Agnes’ mother, and Gustav’s ex-wife, dies, Gustav returns to their family home for the first time in many years. It’s clear that he hasn’t cultivated a relationship with his daughters, despite the fact that Agnes played a child role in one of his most acclaimed films. Gustav returns with a proposition: he has written a screenplay that he wants to film in their family home, with
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Train Dreams follows logger Robert Grainer as he navigates love, loss, and life’s transience in early 20th-century America. Directed by Clint Bentley, the film’s visual poetry, fluid editing, and naturalistic performances—especially from Will Patton—capture the beauty and melancholy of ordinary life, resonating deeply with themes of change and inevitability.
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From Boogie Nights to There Will Be Blood and now, One Battle After Another, films by Paul Thomas Anderson have defined decades. The anticipation for a new Paul Thomas Anderson film matches the heights of a new Christopher Nolan or Martin Scorsese project. Audiences know the cast of characters’ll entertain them, but […]
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Park Chan-wook dazzles once again with his striking visuals and wickedly sharp humour in this darkly satirical thriller, though it never quite captures the pulse-pounding urgency of his greatest films.

Stand-up comedy is one-man’s idea of therapy in Is This Thing On?, a movie that speaks to the importance of holding onto what you love even as responsibilities mount. Will Arnett gives a career-defining performance in this funny and heartfelt movie about overwhelmed, middle-aged adults. Highly Recommended.
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Summary, A depressed man finds meaning in playing pretend. So I got a early screener for this film, not a common thing for me, but there you go. Going to say that upfront. This film was terribly depressing, I had seen in the trailer it be called a feel good film, I don’t see where […]
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It’s been a very long time since I read Mary Shelly’s book, though I do remember enjoying it, about a mad scientist who puts a corpse together and gives it life. It’s ripe for adaptation, and it’s first big one – that black-and-white monster relic – is considered a classic. I haven’t seen all adaptations […]
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Marty Mauser, a wily hustler with a dream no one respects, goes to hell and back in pursuit of greatness.
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Continuing on with the gala showings at the London Film Festival this year, the next film I decided to go for was The Mastermind. I have a passing familiarity with the work of Kelly Reichardt, I’ve seen a few of them, really liking Meek’s Cutoff and First Cow, but I’m not overtly familiar with her […]
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In my exploration of more “niche” films, Wong Kar Wai has become one of my favorite directors. So far I have watched: Chungking Express (1994) Fallen Angels (1995) Happy Together (1997) In the Mood for Love (2000) 2046 (2004) I can’t recommend each of these enough. If you’re feeling especially interested, watch them in the […]
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Should your aunt have questions about Hamnet. 2026 Oscar Best Picture Nominees, Ranked by How Much They’ll Bum You Out Liz Shannon Miller
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Greetings again from the darkness. What is true human nature? Is there even such a thing? Are we preprogrammed to do the right thing, or is it our nature to hold grudges, seek revenge, and take advantage of every situation? This superb film from Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi explores the topic, and it’s important to […]
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Unless you’ve been living in a coffin for the past hundred years, pretty much everyone alive knows the legend of Count Dracula, as told by Bram Stoker. For decades, vampire lore has been spun into televisions shows and countless movies, often remaking the exact same scenario over and over again. Enter: Abraham’s Boys: A Dracula […]
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A popular singer anxiously waits for her medical test results in this charming yet reflective drama that remains one of Varda’s best-known works from the French New Wave era.
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I often wonder whether Franz Kafka realised that his writing would have such an enormous impact on global culture – not only have his works been formative in the creation of entire literary movements, the very mention of his name evokes particular images and ideas, such as the frustrations of navigating the bureaucracy, endless hallways […]
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Greetings again from the darkness. There may have been a movie that surprised me more than this one during 2024, but off the top of my head, I can’t think of one. My expectations were low for a film based on the true story of a British boy band pop star whose music I wasn’t […]
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One of the main problems when it comes to remaking huge, unsubtle sci-fi action movies from the 80s and 90s is that they tend to lose the bolshy personality and razor wit that made them so distinctive in the first place. Take both Robocop and Total Recall for example: two undisputed bangers from Paul Verhoven […]
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Writer/Director: David O. Russell Co-writer: Eric Warren Singer Starring: Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Bradley Cooper ‘Powerful Period Piece’ In an awards season filled with movies about serious subjects, intense edge-of-the-seat thrillers and dark comedies, “American Hustle” stands out like a bright lightbulb. Yet neither because of the stylish time-period that it aims to capture […]
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Jennifer Lawrence already had a billion-dollar franchise, an Academy Award, and worldwide acclaim to her name before turning 30. Now fully transitioned into adult roles, Lynne Ramsey’s singular and challenging Die My Love might be the defining performance of Lawrence’s career.
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